Diabetes not good for people with severe mental illness

ANI  |  Washington D.C. [U.S.A.] 

is deadlier for people with that it is for mentally stable people, a new research has claimed.

Among more than 15,000 patients with severe mental illness, 28.1 percent had Type 2 diabetes, the researchers reported in the study. In contrast, 12.2 percent of the general population is estimated to have the

Among racial minorities with severe mental illness, the incidences were 36.9 percent for Hispanics, 36.3 percent for African Americans and 30.7 percent for Asians - versus 25.1 percent for whites.

The study, which was led by Christina Mangurian, followed her previous research that linked to low levels of testing for diabetes, low rates of testing - despite a significantly higher likelihood of being positive - and, among women, low rates of screening for

"Antipsychotic medications prescribed for conditions like and may cause weight gain and impact cholesterol levels and insulin resistance," said Mangurian.

"Additionally, people with severe mental illness have more tenuous life circumstances, including food insecurity, low income, and unstable housing situations, which all increase their risk of Stressors such as structural racism compound these problems in minorities."

Prediabetes, in which blood sugar levels are elevated, was also found to be high among people with the severe mental illness. Close to half were found to have prediabetes, versus an estimated one-third of the general population.

The condition was more common among those who were minorities and tended to emerge as young as age 20, the researchers noted.

The study utilised a database of information from patients with the severe mental illness.

"We were able to leverage Kaiser Permanente's extensive electronic record data to improve our understanding of the burden of and in people with severe mental illness and develop insights on how to address racial/ethnic and age disparities in this high-risk population," said

"The results of the study indicate that we should be screening all patients with severe mental illness for diabetes," said Mangurian. "I view this as an opportunity to change how doctors think about screening and to help prevent diabetes. By diagnosing early, we can help patients make lifestyle modifications or start medicine so that they don't develop diabetes."

The study findings appear in the journal

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, June 14 2018. 09:50 IST